Staggered open-access gold run 'won't break bank'
Read report carefully before panicking about costs, Finch insiders advise. Paul Jump writes
Read report carefully before panicking about costs, Finch insiders advise. Paul Jump writes
QAA not set up to ensure universities are raising quality, analysis claims. Paul Jump reports
The amount of money that UK universities earn from knowledge exchange rose by 7 per cent to just over ?3.3 billion between 2009-10 and 2010-11, according to a report by the 糖心Vlog Funding...
Body aims to lose 'unhelpful' name and recruit new members abroad. John Morgan reports
We all view our lives through tinted spectacles that shape our recollections, finds Helen Fulton
Barbara Stephens finds few clear pointers for the UK in the sobering tale of American dropout rates
According to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the right to health is a human right. But what this entails, and in what sense health can be a right, are still matters of controversy. In his...
At one point in Emir Kusturica's 1995 film Underground, the viewer comes across a vast network of tunnels mysteriously interconnecting the whole of Europe. While above ground the Cold War is getting...
Henry Farrell disentangles his Hitchcock from his super-nodes to reveal a pessimistic world view
Focusing on the café as a social space as well as on coffee as an object of production and consumption, this excellent book combines academic rigour with lively descriptions and compelling prose....
Most palaeontologists now take it for granted that our subject has significant things to say about the nature of evolutionary change; uniquely, we have the time dimension. Yet the fossil record is...
Les Gofton reminds us that in popular music as in life, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery
Raising the Stakes reports on a cultural phenomenon that few of us are familiar with. While computer games have become part of our mainstream culture, the professional e-sport arena is a place for...
The story of Charles Dickens' development as a storyteller - from his first anonymous unpaid sketch in December 1833 to the publication of Barnaby Rudge in 1841 - is told extremely well in this fine...
Mascots, especially animals, play a big role in the multibillion-dollar business of US university marketing. Is it all just fun, asks David Mould, or have we gone too far in allowing corporatised...